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First Monday, Volume 12, 2007
Volume 12, Number 1, January 2007
- Benno Luthiger, Carola Jungwirth:
Pervasive fun. - Diane Harley:
Why study users? An environmental scan of use and users of digital resources in humanities and social sciences undergraduate education. - Emily Heinlen:
Genealogy and the economic drain on Ireland: Unintended consequences. - Andy White:
Understanding hypertext cognition: Developing mental models to aid users' comprehension.
Volume 12, Number 2, February 2007
- Charles M. Schweik, Robert English:
Tragedy of the FOSS commons? Investigating the institutional designs of free/libre and open source software projects. - David L. Tulloch
:
Many, many maps: Empowerment and online participatory mapping. - Limor Shifman, Hamutal Ma'apil Varsano:
The clean, the dirty and the ugly: A critical analysis of 'clean joke' Web Sites. - The Hirsch index applied to topics of interest to developing countries.
- Teemu Mikkonen
, Tere Vadén
, Niklas Vainio:
The Protestant ethic strikes back: Open source developers and the ethic of capitalism.
Volume 12, Number SI-8: A Web site with a view - The Third World on First Monday
- Eduardo Villanueva Mansilla:
Introduction. - Mohammed Ibahrine
:
Towards a national telecommunications strategy in Morocco. First Monday 9(1) (2004) - Michael Blakemore, Roderic Dutton:
e-Government, e-Society and Jordan: Strategy, theory, practice, and assessment. First Monday 8(11) (2003) - Alan R. Peslak:
A review of national information and communication technologies (ICT) and a proposed National Electronic Initiative Framework (NEIF). First Monday 11(5) (2006) - Larry Press:
The Internet in developing nations: Grand challenges. First Monday 9(4) (2004) - Larry Press:
Refuting objections to a Global Rural Network (GRNet) for developing nations. First Monday 9(8) (2004) - Robin van Koert:
E-media in development: Combining multiple e-media types. First Monday 8(2) (2003) - Derek Keats:
Collaborative development of open content: A process model to unlock the potential for African universities. First Monday 8(2) (2003) - Rishab Aiyer Ghosh:
Licence fees and GDP per capita: The case for open source in developing countries. First Monday 8(12) (2003) - Daniel Poulin:
Open access to law in developing countries. First Monday 9(12) (2004) - K. O. Jagboro:
A study of Internet usage in Nigerian universities: A case study of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria. First Monday 8(2) (2003) - Ramzi Nasser
, Kamal Abouchedid
:
Problems and the Epistemology of Electronic Publishing in the Arab World: The Case of Lebanon. First Monday 6(9) (2001) - Derek Keats, Maria Beebe, Gunnar Kullenberg:
Using the Internet to enable developing country universities to meet the challenges of globalization through collaborative virtual programmes. First Monday 8(10) (2003) - Shanthi Kalathil, Taylor C. Boas:
The Internet and State Control in Authoritarian Regimes: China, Cuba, and the Counterrevolution. First Monday 6(8) (2001)
Volume 12, Number 3, March 2007
- John Willinsky
:
What open access research can do for Wikipedia. - Derek Keats, J. Philipp Schmidt
:
The genesis and emergence of Education 3.0 in higher education and its potential for Africa. - Linda M. Gallant, Gloria M. Boone, Austin Heap:
Five heuristics for designing and evaluating Web-based communities. - An Nguyen:
The interaction between technologies and society: Lessons learned from 160 evolutionary years of online news services. - Mary W. Elings, Günter Waibel
:
Metadata for all: Descriptive standards and metadata sharing across libraries, archives and museums. - Charles Lyons
:
The library: A distinct local voice? - Corina Pascu
, David Osimo, Martin Ulbrich, Geomina Turlea, Jean Claude Burgelman
:
The potential disruptive impact of Internet2 based technologies.
Volume 12, Number 4, April 2007
- Dennis M. Wilkinson, Bernardo A. Huberman:
Assessing the value of cooperation in Wikipedia. - Anselm Spoerri:
Visualizing the overlap between the 100 most visited pages on Wikipedia for September 2006 to January 2007. - Anselm Spoerri:
What is popular on Wikipedia and why? - Greg Elmer, Peter Malachy Ryan, Zachary Devereaux, Ganaele Langlois
, Joanna Redden
, Fenwick McKelvey:
Election bloggers: Methods for determining political influence. - Peter B. Kaufman:
Video, education and open content: Notes toward a new research and action agenda. - Anna Winterbottom, James North:
Building an open access African studies repository using Web 2.0 principles. - Paul Stacey:
Open educational resources in a global context. - Stefan Görling:
Open source athletes. - Sandra Braman:
Change of state: Information, policy and power. - Victor Kaptelinin, Bonnie A. Nardi:
Acting with technology: Activity theory and interaction design. - Edward J. Valauskas:
FM Interviews: Sandra Braman.
Volume 12, Number 5, May 2007
- Nicholas DiGiuseppe, Bonnie A. Nardi:
Real genders choose fantasy characters: Class choice in world of warcraft. - Kalevi Kilkki:
A practical model for analyzing long tails. - Siobhan Stevenson:
Public libraries, public access computing, FOSS and CI: There are alternatives to private philanthropy. - Axel Bruns
:
Methodologies for mapping the political blogosphere: An exploration using the IssueCrawler research tool. - Erika Pearson:
Digital gifts: Participation and gift exchange in Livejournal communities. - Sorin Adam Matei
, Chris C. Miller, Laura L. Arns, Nick Rauh, Chris Hartman, Robert Bruno:
Visible Past: Learning and discovering in real and virtual space and time.
Volume 12, Number 6, June 2007
- Brian Kahin, Steven J. Jackson:
Preface. - Paul Avery:
Open science grid: Building and sustaining general cyberinfrastructure using a collaborative approach. - James Bessen, Michael J. Meurer:
What's wrong with the patent system? Fuzzy boundaries and the patent tax. - Mario Biagioli:
Bringing peer review to patents. - Sara Boettiger:
Issues in IP management to support open access in collaborative innovation models. - Dan L. Burk
:
Intellectual property and cyberinfrastructure. - Marla M. Capozzi:
Knowledge management architectures beyond technology. - Gavin Clarkson:
Cyberinfrastructure and patent thickets: Challenges and responses. - Peter A. Freeman:
Is 'designing' cyberinfrastructure -or even, definining it- possible?. - Brett M. Frischmann:
Infrastructure commons in economic perspective. - Shane Greenstein:
Economic experiments in internet access markets. - Dominique Guellec, Maria Pluvia Zuniga:
The role of patents in technology markets: Issues pertaining to data collection and analysis. - Steven J. Jackson, Paul N. Edwards, Geoffrey C. Bowker, Cory P. Knobel:
Understanding infrastructure: History, heuristics and cyberinfrastructure policy. - Kyle L. Jensen, Mark Jinan Chen
, Fiona E. Murray:
A simple method to improve life sciences patent searches using the cyberinfrastructure at the National Institutes of Health. - Brian Kahin:
Cyberinfrastructure and innovation policy. - David W. Lightfoot:
Social and behavioral scientists building cyberinfrastructure. - Christopher J. Mackie:
Cyberinfrastructure, institutions and sustainability. - Arti K. Rai:
Knowledge commons: The case of the biopharmaceutical industry. - Tim Simcoe:
Intellectual property and compatibility standards: A primer. - Andrew Updegrove:
ICT Standard setting today: A system under stress. - Geertrui Van Overwalle, Esther Van Zimmeren, Birgit Verbeure, Gert Matthijs
:
Dealing with patent fragmentation in ICT and genetics: Patent pools and clearing houses. - Joel West:
Seeking open infrastructure: Contrasting open standards, open source and open innovation. - Sacha Wunsch-Vincent, Taylor Reynolds
, Andrew Wyckoff:
Implementing openness: An international institutional perspective. - Arden L. Bement Jr.:
Conference Keynote Address. - David Wu:
Conference Keynote Address.
Volume 12, Number 7, July 2007
- Valerie D. Glenn:
Preserving government and political information: The Web-at-Risk Project. - Joanna Norman:
The Florida folklike digitization and education project.
- Anne-Imelda Radice, Jay Jordan, Kenneth Hamma, Liz Bishoff:
Welcome to WebWise. - Elizabeth Broun:
Keynote address: Envisioning American art 2.0. - Kristen Overbeck Laise:
The Health Heritage Index findings on digital collections. - Ann Russell:
Surveying the digital readiness of institutions. - Kenneth Thibodeau:
The Electronic Records Archives Program at the National Archives and Records Administration. - Jane Sledge:
Stewarding potential. - Deanna B. Marcum:
Digitizing for access and preservation strategies of the Library of Congress. - Brett Bobley:
Digital humanities and the IMLS/NEH Advancing Knowledge Partnership. - Roy Rosenzweig:
Collaboration and the cyberinfrastructure: Academic collaboration with museums and libraries in the digital era. - Diane M. Zorich
:
Defining digital stewardship in the digital age.
Volume 12, Number 8, August 2007
- David Ronfeldt, John Arquilla:
The promise of noöpolitik. - Paul Duguid:
Inheritance and loss? A brief survey of Google Books. - Nathan Zeldes, David Sward, Sigal Louchheim:
Infomania: Why we can't afford to ignore it any longer. - Nicklas Lundblad:
e-Exclusion and Bot Rights: Legal aspects of the robots exclusion standard for public agencies and other public sector bodies with Swedish examples. - Robert L. Frost:
Rearchitecting the music business: Mitigating music piracy by cutting out the record companies. - Caroline Haythornthwaite
, Richard Andrews
, Michelle M. Kazmer
, Bertram C. Bruce, Rae-Anne Montague, Christina Preston:
Theories and models of and for online learning. - Mark E. Kann, Jeff Berry, Connor Grant, Phil Zager:
The Internet and youth political participation. - Nancy Baym:
The new shape of online community: The example of Swedish independent music fandom. - Finn Årup Nielsen:
Scientific citations in Wikipedia. - Alison J. Head:
Beyond Google: How do students conduct academic research?. - Robert F. Carey, Jacquelyn A. Burkell:
Revisiting the Four Horsemen of the Infopocalypse: Representations of anonymity and the Internet in Canadian newspapers.
Volume 12, Number 9, September 2007
- Andreas Martin Lisewski:
Can the Internet cope with stress? - Shlomo Argamon, Moshe Koppel, James W. Pennebaker
, Jonathan Schler:
Mining the Blogosphere: Age, gender and the varieties of self-expression. - Lori Kendall:
"Shout Into the Wind, and It Shouts Back" Identity and interactional tensions on LiveJournal. - Noriko Hara, Youngmin Jo:
Internet politics: A comparative analysis of U.S. and South Korea presidential campaigns. - Olli Sotamaa:
On modder labour, commodification of play, and mod competitions. - Denise Meredyth, Julian Thomas
:
Social enterprise and aspiration: Atherton Gardens and the e-ACE network. - Theo Röhle:
Desperately seeking the consumer: Personalized search engines and the commercial exploitation of user data. - Marco Gui:
Formal and substantial Internet information skills: The role of socio-demographic differences on the possession of different components of digital literacy. - Lucio Picci:
Reputation-based governance. - M. K. Sterpka:
The aesthetics of networks: A conceptual approach toward visualizing the composition of the Internet. - Terje Hillesund
:
Reading Books in the Digital Age subsequent to Amazon, Google and the long tail.
Volume 12, Number 10, October 2007
- Brian Owen, Kevin Stranack:
Preface. - Thomas Abraham, Suvarsha Minj:
Scientific journal publishing in India: Promoting electronic publishing of scholarly journals in India. - Albert Borrero, Mila Ramos, Anna Arsenal, Katherine Lopez, Gene Hettel:
Scholarly publishing initiatives at the International Rice Research Institute: Linking users to public goods via open access. - Mary M. Case, Nancy R. John:
Opening up scholarly information at the University of Illinois at Chicago. - Alasia Datonye Dennis:
The impact of the open access movement on medical based scholarly publishing in Nigeria. - Mikael K. Elbæk, Lars Nondal
:
The Library as a mediator for e-?publishing: A case on how a library can become a significant factor in facilitating digital scholarly communication and open access publishing for less Web-?savvy journals. - Michael Felczak, Rowland Lorimer, Richard Smith:
From production to publishing at CJC online: Experiences, insights, and considerations for adoption. - Slobodanka (Bobby) Graham:
Open access to open publish: National Library of Australia. - Richard W. Kopak, Chia-Ning Chiang:
Annotating and linking in the Open Journal Systems. - John W. Maxwell:
Extending OJS into small magazines: The OMMM Project. - Michael D. Mills, Robert J. Esterhay, Judah Thornewill:
Using a Tetradic Network Technique and a Transaction Cost Economic Analysis to illustrate an economic model for an open access medical journal. - Heather Morrison:
Rethinking collections - Libraries and librarians in an open age: A theoretical view. - Ezra Ondari-Okemwa:
Scholarly publishing in sub-Saharan Africa in the twenty-first century: Challenges and opportunities. - Linda L. Phillips:
Newfound Press: The digital imprint of the University of Tennessee Libraries. - Cornelius Puschmann
, Peter Reimer
:
DiPP and eLanguage: Two cooperative models for open access. - Ajit Pyati:
A critical theory of open access: Libraries and electronic publishing. - Mahmoud Saghaei:
Establishing an online editorial and publishing system: One-year experience with the Journal of Research in Medical Sciences. - Christina Struik, Hilde Coldenbrander, Stephen Warren, Halina de Maurivez, Heather Joseph, Denise Koufougiannakis, Heather Morrison, Kathleen Shearer, Kumiko Vézina, Andrew Waller:
Transitioning to open access (OA). - Astrid Van Wesenbeeck
, Martin Van Luijt:
Partners in science: OJS, a collaborative researchers' workbench and an open repository.
Volume 12, Number 11, November 2007
- Jennifer Golbeck:
The dynamics of Web-based social networks: Membership, relationships, and change. - Holly Kruse:
"An organization of impersonal relations": The Internet and networked markets. - R. Michelle Green:
Trust but verify: caution in the application of Internet-based research. - Brett A. Bumgarner:
You have been poked: Exploring the uses and gratifications of Facebook among emerging adults. - Christopher A. Paul:
Hub and terminal: Developing a method for textual analysis on the World Wide Web. - Richard J. Cox:
Machines in the archives: Technology and the coming transformation of archival reference.
Volume 12, Number 12, December 2007
- Valérie-Anne Bleyen, Leo Van Hove:
Western European newspapers and their online revenue models: An overview. - Besiki Stvilia
:
A model for ontology quality evaluation. - Charles R. McClure, Paul T. Jaeger, John Carlo Bertot:
The Looming Infrastructure Plateau? Space, Funding, Connection Speed, and the Ability of Public Libraries to meet the Demand for Free Internet Access. - Roger Clarke
:
The cost profiles of alternative approaches to journal publishing. - Sue Thomas, Chris Joseph, Jess Laccetti, Bruce Mason, Simon Mills, Simon Perril, Kate Pullinger:
Transliteracy: Crossing divides.
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